Your Switch got more expensive last year thanks to Trump’s tariffs, but Nintendo isn’t taking the hit quietly. The gaming giant filed a lawsuit in the U.S. Court of International Trade demanding the government refund every tariff dollar it paid — with interest. Nintendo’s targeting the Treasury Department, Homeland Security, and Customs, claiming they illegally collected duties under “unauthorized Executive Orders.”
This isn’t corporate theater. Nintendo has serious legal ammunition thanks to February’s Supreme Court smackdown of Trump’s tariff regime. In Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump, Chief Justice Roberts led a 6-3 majority ruling that Congress — not the President — holds constitutional authority over tariffs. The Court gutted Trump’s use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, declaring his immigration-and-drugs justification for trade taxes fundamentally unconstitutional.
Here’s what that Supreme Court victory means for your wallet: Nintendo raised Switch OLED prices $50 to $399.99 and standard models $40 to $339.99 last August, citing “market conditions” — corporate speak for “tariff hell.” The company had smartly shifted manufacturing from China to Vietnam years earlier, but Trump expanded tariff scope in August 2025 to include Vietnam, catching even that hedge. Accessories took hits too, with Pro Controllers jumping to $84.99. Nintendo maintained Switch 2 pricing at $449.99, but only through strategic timing and supply chain gymnastics.
Trump’s response to the Supreme Court loss? “Their decision is incorrect. But it doesn’t matter, because we have very powerful alternatives.” He immediately announced new 10% global tariffs under Section 122 of the Trade Act, which grants the president emergency tariff power for roughly 150 days. That’s his constitutional workaround, but it can’t retroactively justify the already-collected IEEPA tariffs Nintendo wants back.
Nintendo’s lawsuit could unlock billions in refunds across the tech industry. Samsung and Microsoft also raised console prices under the same tariff pressure. If Nintendo wins, expect a flood of similar cases from companies that paid what the Supreme Court called unconstitutional taxes. Your gaming hardware prices might finally return to pre-tariff levels — assuming companies pass savings along rather than pocket the difference.
Nintendo’s official comment stays corporate-minimal: “We can confirm we filed a request. We have nothing else to share on this topic.” Translation: Let the lawyers handle the talking while they pursue what could be the gaming industry’s most consequential trade case since the console wars began.






























